What is the forensic pathologist doing?

Forensic pathologist is a licensed physician who performs a physical examination of people who have died or people who were injured potentially criminal way. When a forensic pathologist examines the dead above all, he can work as a medical investigator, although this term is sometimes not used. Titotologists, who primarily explore life, can sometimes be called clinical forensic pathologists. However, some of these experts carry out tests for the dead and living. It would be easy to say that the only thing these doctors do is to do autopsy, but it is not. They may first explore the outside of the body for physical injury and documented any evidence of it, and take blood and tissue samples to determine what substances (such as poisons or drugs) were in the body. It must also collect any physical evidence that is on the body that could indicate that a crime has been committed or could lead to finding a person responsible for this crime.

Forensic pathologist will certainly usually perform an autopsy, but the rate to what it is necessary can be at the discretion of the doctor. If the cause of death is determined before the full autopsy occurs, it may not always be necessary to continue the test. Regardless of the test finding, these doctors must be very good, how to document them.

When there was a crime, forensic pathologists may be asked to testify in court to find out. They may also be asked to testify specifically how they think it could happen when death became a violent crime and in accordance with their knowledge of person injuries and the way they usually occur. Similarly, clinical pathologists may be obliged to testify to their findings concerning the injury of the living person in connection with the proceedings of a criminal or civil court. Creating a testimony requires to have reliable notes from autopsy or tests to be a testimonyE.

Since it may occur in connection with a crime, a forensic pathologist could study some extra things that are not fully related to medicine. For example, they may have other knowledge in areas such as toxicology (study of poisons), finding and collecting trace evidence, DNA analysis, and other fields such as ballistics. Ballistics includes trajectories of objects in motion and allows doctors to project an accurate way to injure when various weapons or objects were used to method.

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